Review: a peaceful weekend of faith and politics
The Wheeler Centre’s lectures on Faith and Culture prompted wide ranging discussions, but as Justine Costigan reports, God barely got a mention.
The Wheeler Centre’s lectures on Faith and Culture prompted wide ranging discussions, but as Justine Costigan reports, God barely got a mention.
Richard Dawkins was uncharacteristically caught off guard on a number of occasions during an interview with Andrew Denton for the highly acclaimed ABC program, Enough Rope, as chosen by Jonathan Wilkinson as part of our ’50 interviews’ project.
After watching a bit of televangelism in the wee hours, Matt De Neef asks: Why is it that one child’s survival against the odds is put down to divine intervention yet when thousands upon thousands of other children die of starvation, dehydration and AIDS, God is nowhere to be seen?
The Wheeler Centre’s lectures on Faith and Culture prompted wide ranging discussions, but as Justine Costigan reports, God barely got a mention.
Richard Dawkins was uncharacteristically caught off guard on a number of occasions during an interview with Andrew Denton for the highly acclaimed ABC program, Enough Rope, as chosen by Jonathan Wilkinson as part of our ’50 interviews’ project.
After watching a bit of televangelism in the wee hours, Matt De Neef asks: Why is it that one child’s survival against the odds is put down to divine intervention yet when thousands upon thousands of other children die of starvation, dehydration and AIDS, God is nowhere to be seen?
The evolutionist versus creationist debate reignites as Richard Dawkins and Giles Fraser get into a heated disagreement during this interview chosen by Adam Hill for our 50 Interviews project.
The Wheeler Centre’s lectures on Faith and Culture prompted wide ranging discussions, but as Justine Costigan reports, God barely got a mention.
Richard Dawkins was uncharacteristically caught off guard on a number of occasions during an interview with Andrew Denton for the highly acclaimed ABC program, Enough Rope, as chosen by Jonathan Wilkinson as part of our ’50 interviews’ project.
After watching a bit of televangelism in the wee hours, Matt De Neef asks: Why is it that one child’s survival against the odds is put down to divine intervention yet when thousands upon thousands of other children die of starvation, dehydration and AIDS, God is nowhere to be seen?